- Adelaide Kemble
Adelaide Kemble (November 1815 –
4 August 1879 ), was a British opera singer of great promise in the first half of the nineteenth century. She was the younger daughter of actorCharles Kemble and sister to the noted actress and anti-slavery activistFanny Kemble . Her first operatic performance on theLondon stage was made in "Norma" on2 November 1841 .In 1843 she married
Edward John Sartoris , a rich Italian, and retired after a brief but brilliant career. She wrote "A Week in a French Country House" (1867), a bright and humorous story, and of a literary quality not shared by other tales that followed. Her son,Algernon Charles Frederick Sartoris , marriedEllen (Nellie) Wrenshall Grant , the daughter of the famous American general and presidentUlysses S. Grant onMay 21 ,1874 in theEast Room of theWhite House .The young
Frederic Leighton ( the painter of "Flaming June" and a president of the British Royal Academy of Art from 1878 until his death in 1895) was introduced to her circle inRome , and was greatly influenced by her in many respects, most evidently, perhaps, in social and musical areas. Her "soirees" surely were an inspiration for his famous, annual "Leighton Musics" later in the great Victorian painter's career, held in his home (now Leighton House) in London. Mrs. Sartoris and the younger artist maintained a close friendship for the rest of her life.Reference for Leighton connection, among many others: E. Barrington: "The Life, Letters, and Work of Frederic Leighton", 1896.
References
*1911
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.